“I’m shocked because there are so many international students and students of color from all over, I can’t think of a single person who it might have been,” said Rohletter, who added she thinks the swastikas were meant to symbolize blanket intolerance, not just anti-Semitisim.

“I just couldn’t believe that would happen here, I don’t understand at all, like what was even the motive? So many people here are very vocal about how liberal and open they are, it’s almost unimaginable.”

Other students living in the dorm were horrified by the hateful vandalism, they told The Post, with one even linking it a change in the political mood on campus.

“This year there was a Young Republicans group started on campus, so maybe it has something to do with that,” mused New Jersey native Morgan Raspanti, 20.

“This is a very liberal and open school, so everyone is just shocked and disgusted,” she said. “This is an atrocity and its not acceptable behavior and no one is okay with it. Those kinds of attitudes are not welcome here.”

A 21-year-old Republican student who voted for Trump told The Post he was horrified by the “hostile” graffiti.

“I stand with my student body, and don’t think this should be tolerated,” said the undergrad, who gave his name only as Robbie. “I hope they find and expel those students because they are a danger to everyone. The New School is not like that, and I hope this doesn’t give liberals any more reason to hate us because this isn’t what anybody I know wants.”

New School president David E. Van Zandt sent out an email to staff and students early Sunday, writing that administration will “not accept this illegal, inflammatory and hurtful influence on our campus.”

“Any attempt to discriminate, instill fear in or intimidate our students will result in serious and swift consequences both from the NYPD and The New School,” the email read. Brooklyn passerbys first noticed another swastika, this one blasted in white spray-paint, early Sunday.

The offensive marking, which was left on Montgomery St. near Brooklyn Ave, first caught the internet’s notice after Jewish community member Mordechai Lighstone tweeted a picture at 8:35 a.m.

“It’s never good to see these things,” Lightstone, who lives in the neighborhood, told The Post. “But obviously it’s not new here, we’ve seen these things in the past.”

Given the current political climate, the 32-year-old father said he felt it was important to use these instances like these to “fight darkness and spread education.”

“We need to use [the election results] to galvanize our communities toward doing more good, reaching out to each other and increasing goodness towards all people,” Lightstone said. “We need to realize there can be a good and important outcome from all this.”

Lightstone later posted a picture to Twitter of the hateful emblem concealed by an orange safety cone.